Leticia Vasquez has been with BCSO for 25 years

SAN ANTONIO – Bexar County Commissioners on Wednesday named the successor for embattled Precinct 2 Constable Michelle Barrientes Vela.

Commissioners selected Leticia Vasquez, a 25-year veteran of the Bexar County Sheriff's Office among five candidates. Vasquez won't be sworn in officially until at least next Friday.

"At the end of the day, it is law. I do know the law. I'm just going to try and figure out what the constable's office is all about," Vasquez said.

Barrientes Vela declined to comment on the appointment, according to her attorney Les Sachanowicz.

"She has chosen not to do any interviews," Sachanowicz said. "She has thought it over and there is not anything that she could add at this time."

Leticia Vasquez is next. She’s a 25-year veteran of BCSO. Has worked in the jail, in court security, with the DARE program and then in patrol. Was then asked to join the agency’s community policing unit #KSATnews

A Bexar County visiting judge on Monday denied Barrientes Vela's request to stop commissioners from interviewing and naming her successor. However, the troubled constable will remain in office until at least Oct. 11, when a hearing will take place to determine when and if the appointment of her replacement becomes effective.

Barrientes Vela triggered automatic resignation under the state law last week when she first announced to KSAT and later other media outlets that she planned to run for sheriff in 2020. The law stipulates that elected officials who announce plans for another office with more than 13 months left in their current term forfeit their seat.

Her public declaration to run for sheriff came as the FBI and Texas Rangers were carrying out a 10-hour raid inside her Northwest Side offices.

In a statement released over the weekend, an attorney representing Barrientes Vela called the comment "an excited utterance rather than a formal political declaration to seek the sheriff's seat in 2020."